Phi Kappa Psi, also called "Phi Psi," is an American collegiate social fraternity founded at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania on February 19, 1852.[1] There are over a hundred chapters and colonies at accredited four year colleges and universities throughout the United States.[2] More than 112,000 men have been initiated into Phi Kappa Psi since its founding.
The Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity is composed of chapters and alumni associations, the former of which is the scope of this list. Each chapter is chartered to an individual host institution. These host institutions must be accredited four year degree granting colleges and universities in a state, province, territory, or federal district of Canada or the United States. To date, chapter charters have only been granted to groups at U.S. institutions.
When Phi Kappa Psi is extending to an institution that does not currently have a chapter, a probationary group called a "colony" is formed. After criteria are met, that colony receives its charter and becomes a chapter.
A chapter becomes inactive when it relinquishes its charter, or the charter is revoked by the fraternity.
Chapter Naming Convention
editThe chapter naming convention is composed of the top level subnational division of that chapter's host institution, and a Greek letter in alphabetical order from when the charter was originally issued. For example, the first Phi Psi chapter is from Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. The first letter in the Greek alphabet is Alpha. The chapter name is Pennsylvania Alpha. The second chapter was installed at the University of Virginia, so it is the Virginia Alpha chapter. The third chapter was installed at Washington & Lee University, in Virginia, so it is the Virginia Beta chapter. The George Washington University chapter is only one ever chartered in the District of Columbia, so it is the District of Columbia Alpha chapter.
If borders change, the chapter name does not. Virginia Delta was chartered at Bethany College. After the Civil War, Bethany College was in West Virginia, but the chapter remained Virginia Delta.
Chapters are named based on when the charter is granted, not when it is installed. As a result, there have been rare instances when the chapter naming convention may not appear to be consistent with the charter dates. For example, four charters have been granted in Iowa. The second granted was the fourth installed, so Iowa Beta chartered after Iowa Gamma and Iowa Delta.
List of Chapters and Colonies
edit- Italicization of an entire row indicates an inactive chapter or a colony.
- For an active chapter, Italicization indicates years when inactive.
- The S column indicates the status of a chapter or colony:
- a = active
- c = colony
- i = inactive
- s = suspended
# | Chapter Name | Chartered |
Host Institution | S | Notes | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Pennsylvania Alpha | 1852–1868, 1873 |
Washington & Jefferson | a | This was the original chapter of Phi Kappa Psi, which was founded at Jefferson College and which moved to Washington & Jefferson when the school merged with Jefferson College to form Washington & Jefferson College. The existing chapter at Washington college, Pennsylvania Delta, was assimilated into Pennsylvania Alpha | [3] |
2 | Virginia Alpha | 1853–1861, 1865 |
University of Virginia | a | Established by fraternity founder C. P. T. Moore and chartered December 8, 1853, and by the end of its first year had initiated forty-six men | [3][4] |
3 | Virginia Beta | 1855–1861, 1865 |
Washington & Lee University | a | [3] | |
4 | Pennsylvania Beta | 1855 | Allegheny College | a | This chapter has operated longer without interruption than any other in the the fraternity | [3] |
5 | Pennsylvania Gamma | 1855–1988, 1991 |
Bucknell University | a | [3] | |
6 | Pennsylvania Delta | 1855–1864 | Washington College | i | Merged with Pennsylvania Alpha when their host institutions merged | [3] |
7 | Pennsylvania Epsilon | 1855 | Gettysburg College | a | Site of Miller Hall, 1882, the first chapter house erected in the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and the first college fraternity house in the state of Pennsylvania | [3] |
8 | Virginia Gamma | 1855–1861, 1865–1900 |
Hampden–Sydney College | i | [3] | |
9 | South Carolina Alpha | 1857–1872, 1884–1892, 1972–1991 |
University of South Carolina | i | [3] | |
10 | Mississippi Alpha | 1857–1861, 1881–1912, 1930 |
University of Mississippi | a | The third fraternity established at the university. University closed during Civil War. Afterward chapter reestablished. Anti-fraternity legislation closed all fraternities on campus in 1912 | [3] |
11 | Virginia Delta | 1859–1882 | Bethany College, now in West Virginia | i | In 1880 because of a faculty refusal to punish a student guilty of a vicious assault on a member of the chapter the members voted to leave the college in a body, which was done | [3] |
12 | Tennessee Alpha | 1859–1860 | LaGrange Synodical College | i | In 1861 every member of the chapter enlisted in the Confederate Army | [3] |
13 | Pennsylvania Zeta | 1859 | Dickinson College | a | [3] | |
14 | Pennsylvania Eta | 1860 | Franklin and Marshall College | a | [3] | |
15 | Tennessee Beta | 1860–1861, 1867–1879 |
Cumberland University | i | The chapter had a precarious existence during the Civil War returned to a strong, honorable, existence and then faded away | [3] |
16 | Mississippi Beta | 1860–1861 | Mississippi College | i | The chapter had been in existence only a few weeks when the Civil War broke out and every member enlisted. Several were killed | [3] |
17 | Ohio Alpha | 1861 | Ohio Wesleyan University | a | [3] | |
18 | Illinois Alpha | 1864–1870, 1878 |
Northwestern University | a | [3] | |
19 | Indiana Alpha | 1865 | DePauw University | a | [3] | |
20 | Kentucky Alpha | 1865–1866 | Transylvania University | i | Then named Kentucky University. Faculty opposition forced chapter to disband | [3] |
21 | Illinois Beta | 1865–1869, 1880–1886, 1894–1970, 1985–1997 |
University of Chicago | i | Illinois Beta was chartered at a University of Chicago that opened in 1857, but closed in 1886. A new University of Chicago was created in 1890, and Illinois Beta was revived when Phi Kappa Psi chartered there in 1894 | [5][3] |
22 | Ohio Beta | 1866–1988, 1991 |
Wittenberg University | a | [6] | |
23 | Iowa Alpha | 1867–1876, 1885 |
University of Iowa | a | [3] | |
24 | District of Columbia Alpha | 1868–1899, 1991 |
The George Washington University | a | Formerly called Columbian College. In 1899 the entire active membership enlisted in the Spanish-American War | [3] |
25 | Iowa Gamma | 1868–1871 | Cornell College | i | [3] | |
26 | New York Alpha | 1869–1877, 1886 |
Cornell University | a | [3] | |
27 | Pennsylvania Theta | 1869 | Lafayette College | a | [3] | |
28 | Indiana Beta | 1869 | Indiana University | a | [7] | |
29 | Missouri Alpha | 1869–1876, 1908 |
University of Missouri | a | This chapter was the first fraternity established on this campus and occupies a house built in 1880 | [7][8] |
30 | Tennessee Gamma | 1870–1875 | University of Nashville | i | Chapter closed as result of an outbreak of Asiatic Cholera. The university closed as a separate entity in 1909. Previously the medical school became part of Vanderbilt University | [7] |
31 | Indiana Gamma | 1870–1901, 1948 |
Wabash College | a | [7] | |
32 | Ohio Gamma | 1871–1892 | Wooster College | i | [7] | |
33 | Illinois Gamma | 1871–1884 | Monmouth College | i | After four years the college ordered its fraternities to disband, but for ten years thereafter the chapter continued sub rosa | [7] |
34 | Virginia Epsilon | 1871–1879 | Randolph-Macon College | i | [7] | |
35 | New York Gamma | 1872–1876, 1892–1991 |
Columbia University | i | [7] | |
36 | Wisconsin Alpha | 1875–1894, 1897–1939 |
University of Wisconsin–Madison | i | Phi Kappa Psi was the third fraternity to establish a chapter at Madison. It was organized as a protest against the the student life maintained by other campus fraternities | [7] |
37 | Kansas Alpha | 1876 | University of Kansas | a | [7] | |
38 | Michigan Alpha | 1876–1972, 1983 |
University of Michigan | a | [7] | |
39 | Wisconsin Beta | 1875–1877 | Racine College | i | College no longer exists. There was a faculty of 5 and a student body of 50 | [7] |
40 | Pennsylvania Iota | 1877–1973, 1978 |
University of Pennsylvania | a | [7] | |
41 | Maryland Alpha | 1879–1969, 1975 |
Johns Hopkins University | a | [7] | |
42 | Ohio Delta | 1880 | Ohio State University | a | [7] | |
43 | California Alpha | 1881–1892 | University of the Pacific | i | First chapter in the fraternity to own and occupy a house in which the members lived. Members transferred to the new Stanford University and became the founders of California Beta | [7] |
44 | New York Delta | 1881–1892 | Hobart College | i | The chapter was always small, and with fewer than 100 students in attendance at the college, fraternity prospects were scarce | [7] |
45 | Wisconsin Gamma | 1881–1970, 1978 |
Beloit College | a | [7] | |
46 | Iowa Delta | 1882–1889 | Simpson College | i | College declined and students scattered. | [7] |
47 | Minnesota Alpha | 1883–1888 | Carleton College | i | Most of the members became the founders of Minnesota Beta | [7] |
48 | New York Beta | 1884–1995, 2001 |
Syracuse University | a | [7] | |
49 | New York Epsilon | 1887–1982 | Colgate University | i | Formerly named Madison University. In the 1980s the university launched an effort to accommodate women on the formerly all-male campus. The university offered an interest-free loan to the chapter to be used for house repaired in exchange for accepting coed members. The house corporation donated the chapter house to Colgate | [7] |
50 | Minnesota Beta | 1888 | University of Minnesota | a | [7] | |
51 | Pennsylvania Kappa | 1889–1963 | Swarthmore College | i | Renounced national affiliation in 1960s, changed name to "Phi Omicron Psi" and then to simply "Phi Psi". In 2008 this group was one of only two fraternities at the college | [7][9][10] |
52 | West Virginia Alpha | 1890 | West Virginia University | a | [7] | |
53 | California Beta | 1891 | Stanford University | a | Chapter was established the same year that the university was established | [7] |
54 | New York Zeta | 1891–1912 | Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn | i | [7] | |
55 | Nebraska Alpha | 1895 | University of Nebraska-Lincoln | a | [7] | |
56 | Massachusetts Alpha | 1895–1948 | Amherst College | i | The chapter charter was revoked by the fraternity Executive Council after the chapter broke its promise to the EC in a matter involving membership selection | [7] |
57 | New Hampshire Alpha | 1896–1967 | Dartmouth College | i | [7] | |
58 | California Gamma | 1899–1972, 1976–1991, 1996–1998, 2010 |
University of California, Berkeley | a | [7][11][12] | |
59 | Indiana Delta | 1901 | Purdue University | a | [7] | |
60 | Tennessee Delta | 1901 | Vanderbilt University | s | Suspended until August 2011 | [7][13] |
61 | Rhode Island Alpha | 1902–1978, 1984 |
Brown University | a | National affiliation was severed in 1978, changed name to simply "Phi Psi". The group reaffiliated in 1984 | [7] |
62 | Texas Alpha | 1904 | University of Texas at Austin | a | Charted from the last chapter of the regional fraternity Phi Phi Phi (Tri-Phi), which was founded in 1897 | [7] [14] |
63 | Illinois Delta | 1904 | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | a | [7] | |
64 | Ohio Epsilon | 1906 | Case Western Reserve University | a | [7] | |
65 | Pennsylvania Lambda | 1912 | Pennsylvania State University | a | [7] | |
66 | Iowa Beta | 1913–1999, 2007 |
Iowa State University | a | [7] | |
67 | Colorado Alpha | 1914–1994, 1998 |
University of Colorado at Boulder | a | [7][15] | |
68 | Washington Alpha | 1914 | University of Washington | a | [7] | |
69 | Oklahoma Alpha | 1920–1996, 1999 |
University of Oklahoma | a | [7] | |
70 | Oregon Alpha | 1928–1999, Colony |
University of Oregon | c | [7][16] | |
71 | California Delta | 1927 | University of Southern California | a | [7] | |
72 | Pennsylvania Mu | 1927–1934 | Carnegie Mellon University | i | [7] | |
73 | California Epsilon | 1931 | University of California, Los Angeles | a | [7] | |
74 | North Carolina Alpha | 1934–2001 | Duke University | i | [17][18] | |
75 | Arizona Alpha | 1947–1962, 1977 |
University of Arizona | a | Former Phi Kappa Psi Executive Director Ralph "Dud" Daniel was a founding father in 1947 | [17] |
76 | Oregon Beta | 1948 | Oregon State University | a | [17] | |
77 | Ohio Zeta | 1950–1997, 2009 |
Bowling Green State University | a | [17] | |
78 | Ohio Eta | 1950 | University of Toledo | a | The chartering of Ohio Eta initiated the most members at one time in Phi Kappa Psi history, as 150 men were initiated into the fraternity | [17] |
79 | New York Eta | 1950–1970, 1984 |
University at Buffalo, The State University of New York | a | The chapter was discontinued after the University dissolved all of Greek Life and came to life again after the University re-instituted Greek Life in 1984 | [17] |
80 | Indiana Epsilon | 1953 | Valparaiso University | a | [17] | |
81 | Texas Beta | 1953 | Texas Tech University | a | Formerly named Texas Technological College. Chartered from the Centaur Club, which was founded in 1929. One of the original eight national fraternities at the college | [17] |
82 | Michigan Beta | 1954 | Michigan State University | a | [17] | |
83 | Connecticut Alpha | 1956–1970 | Trinity College | i | [17] | |
84 | Missouri Beta | 1960–1976 | Westminster College | i | [17] | |
85 | Florida Alpha | 1962–1969, 1987 |
Florida State University | a | [17] | |
86 | Arizona Beta | 1962 | Arizona State University | Suspended 2006. Chapter started by two colonizers from Washington Alpha | [17] | |
87 | Alabama Alpha | 1964 | University of Alabama | a | [17] | |
88 | California Zeta | 1964–1972, 1982–1995 |
University of California, Santa Barbara | i | [17] | |
89 | New Jersey Alpha | 1965–1993 | Rider University | i | The chapter ended as a result of hazing and racial insensitivity by a chapter Fraternity Educators, and the chapter's cover-up. The charter was suspended by emergency order of the national fraternity president and Executive Director | [17] |
90 | Nebraska Beta | 1965 | Creighton University | a | [17] | |
91 | Rhode Island Beta | 1966–1988, 1990–2008 |
University of Rhode Island | i | Expelled from campus in 2008 for four years | [17][19] |
92 | Ohio Theta | 1966 | Ashland University | a | [17] | |
93 | California Eta | 1966 | California Polytechnic State University | a | [17] | |
94 | Louisiana Alpha | 1966 | LSU | a | [17] | |
95 | Florida Beta | 1967–1971, 1977–1991 |
University of Florida, Gainesville | i | [17] | |
96 | Oklahoma Beta | 1967–1991 | Oklahoma State University | i | [17] | |
97 | Tennessee Epsilon | 1967 | University of Tennessee | a | [17] | |
98 | California Theta | 1967–1995 | California State University, Northridge | i | Cal Theta was CSUN's first fraternity, founded in 1958 as a local fraternity, Kappa Delta Psi, which then affiliated with Phi Kappa Psi in 1967. The damage done to the CSUN campus by the 1994 Northridge Earthquake had a dramatic effect on lessening the size of subsequent freshmen classes, and as as result, some of the university's fraternities and sororities including Phi Kappa Psi were forced to close | [17] |
99 | New Jersey Beta | 1967–1994, 2010 |
Monmouth University | a | Recolonized 02/22/09 | [17][11] |
100 | Texas Gamma | 1969–1993, 2002 |
Texas State University | a | [17] | |
101 | Louisiana Beta | 1969–1991 | University of Louisiana at Lafayette | i | [17] | |
102 | Minnesota Gamma | 1969 | Minnesota State University, Mankato | a | [17] | |
103 | New Mexico Alpha | 1969–2006 | Eastern New Mexico University | i | [17] | |
104 | Pennsylvania Nu | 1970 | Indiana University of Pennsylvania | a | [17] | |
105 | Ohio Iota | 1970–1997 | University of Akron | i | [17] | |
106 | Tennessee Zeta | 1970–1985 | University of Memphis | i | [17] | |
107 | Indiana Zeta | 1971 | Butler University | a | [17] | |
108 | Ohio Kappa | 1971–1978 | Kent State University | i | The chapter was organized by the fraternity staff and came concurrent with a wave of student protest on the campus culminating with the Kent State Massacre | [17] |
109 | Ohio Lambda | 1972 | Miami University | a | [17] | |
110 | Alabama Beta | 1974–1988, 2005 |
Auburn University | a | [17] | |
111 | Montana Alpha | 1975–1983 | University of Montana | i | [17] | |
112 | Virginia Zeta | 1976 | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University | s | [17][20] | |
113 | Georgia Alpha | 1976 | University of Georgia | a | [17] | |
114 | California Iota | 1979–1995, 1998–2000, 2006 |
University of California, Davis | a | [17] | |
115 | Arkansas Alpha | 1979–1991 | University of Arkansas | i | [17] | |
116 | Pennsylvania Xi | 1984 | Edinboro University of Pennsylvania | a | [17] | |
117 | Illinois Epsilon | 1985 | Illinois State University | a | [17] | |
118 | Delaware Alpha | 1985–1990 | University of Delaware | i | [17] | |
119 | Pennsylvania Omicron | 1985–1992 | Lehigh University | i | [17] | |
120 | Indiana Eta | 1987 | Indiana State University | a | [17] | |
121 | New Jersey Gamma | 1987–1995, Colony |
Rutgers University | c | As of January 4th 2010 Phi Kappa Psi has officially re-colonized at Rutgers | [17][16] |
122 | Pennsylvania Pi | 1987–1993 | Temple University | i | [17] | |
123 | Kentucky Beta | 1988 | University of Kentucky | a | [17] | |
124 | Texas Delta | 1988–1997 | Southern Methodist University | i | [17] | |
125 | Maryland Beta | 1988–1996 | University of Maryland, Baltimore County | i | [17] | |
126 | New Jersey Delta | 1990 | The College of New Jersey | a | [17] | |
127 | California Kappa | 1991 | University of California, Irvine | a | [21] | |
128 | Massachusetts Beta | 1991 | Brandeis University | a | [21] | |
129 | North Carolina Beta | 1991 | East Carolina University | a | [21] | |
130 | New York Theta | 1992 | Rochester Institute of Technology | a | [21] | |
131 | Pennsylvania Rho | 1992 | York College of Pennsylvania | a | [21] | |
132 | Louisiana Gamma | 1993 | Loyola University New Orleans | a | [21] | |
133 | Illinois Zeta | 1993 | DePaul University | a | [21] | |
134 | California Lambda | 1996 | San Diego State University | a | [21] | |
135 | Pennsylvania Sigma | 1996 | University of the Sciences in Philadelphia | a | [21] | |
136 | Illinois Eta | 1999 | Southern Illinois University Edwardsville | a | [21] | |
137 | New Jersey Epsilon | 2000 | Rowan University | a | [21] | |
138 | Georgia Beta | 2000 | Georgia Institute of Technology | a | (colonized April 12, 1998 and chartered May 20, 2000) | [21] |
139 | Pennsylvania Upsilon | 2002 | Drexel University | a | [21] | |
140 | Pennsylvania Tau | 2002–2003 | Penn State Altoona | i | [21] | |
141 | Texas Epsilon | 2002 | Stephen F. Austin State University | a | [21] | |
142 | Minnesota Delta | 2002 | University of Minnesota Duluth | a | [21] | |
143 | Illinois Theta | 2003 | University of Illinois at Chicago | a | [21] | |
144 | Pennsylvania Phi | 2004 | Lycoming College | a | [21] | |
145 | New York Iota | 2004 | Binghamton University | a | [21] | |
146 | New York Kappa | 2004 | State University of New York at Oneonta | a | First chapter to charter at GAC (San Diego 2004) | [21] |
147 | Ohio Mu | 2005 | University of Dayton | a | [21] | |
148 | Illinois Iota | 2007 | Northern Illinois University | a | [21] | |
149 | Maryland Gamma | 2007 | University of Maryland, College Park | a | [21] | |
150 | Texas Zeta | 2008 | Houston Baptist University | a | [21] | |
151 | Ohio Nu | 2008 | Ohio University | a | [21] | |
152 | California Mu | 2008 | Occidental College | a | (Founded April 26, 2008) | [21] |
153 | Indiana Theta | 2008 | Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) | a | [21] | |
154 | California Nu | 2009 | University of California, Riverside | a | Chartered on May 30th 2009 | |
155 | Ohio XI | 2010 | Capital University | a | [11] | |
156 | California Xi | 2010 | California State University, Long Beach | a | [11] | |
999 | Virginia Commonwealth University Colony | Colony | Virginia Commonwealth University | c | [16] | |
999 | Muskingum University Colony | Colony | Muskingum University | c | [16] | |
999 | University of North Carolina at Charlotte Colony | Colony | University of North Carolina at Charlotte | c | [16] |
See also
editFootnotes
edit- ^ Anson 1991, p. III 83.
- ^ Collinsworth 2010, p. 6.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Phi Kapppa Psi 2009, pp. xv.
- ^ Campbell 1952, pp. 12, 223.
- ^ Van Cleve 1902, p. 200.
- ^ Phi Kapppa Psi 1997, pp. ii.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at Phi Kapppa Psi 2009, pp. xvi.
- ^ Miller 2009 gives the history of the Missouri Alpha chapter house and the land it occupies.
- ^ Swarthmore 2007
- ^ Swarthmore 2008
- ^ a b c d http://www.phikappapsi.com/News/Action/Index/2010AprilCharterings
- ^ http://berkeleyheritage.com/berkeley_landmarks/pkp.html
- ^ http://www.vanderbilt.edu/greek_life/pkp.php
- ^ Monteleone, Brenton P. (2004), Texas Alpha 100 Years of History, Dallas: Kelly Fish & Tad DeWree, pp. 237
- ^ http://www.cuphipsi.com/dynamic/?Action=show_custom_content&pageid=3158
- ^ a b c d e http://www.phikappapsi.com/JoinUs/CurrentColonies
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba Phi Kapppa Psi 2009, pp. xvii.
- ^ http://communityhousing.duke.edu/greek/resources/history
- ^ http://newsblog.projo.com/2009/01/readyuri-phi-ps.html
- ^ http://fredericksburg.com/News/apmethods/apstory?urlfeed=WFA/content/AP%20Virginia%20State%20News%20-%20No%20Weather/5f036a0a4c364f61a3544b6e4a2ad25e-3e798ae934774b2181acf955ebb49e0d-entry.xml
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Phi Kapppa Psi 2009, pp. xviii.
References
editBooks
edit- Anson, Jack L.; Marchesani, Robert F. (1991). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (20th ed.). Indianapolis: Baird's Manual Foundation, Inc. pp. III 82–85. ISBN 0963715909.
- Van Cleve, Charles L. (1902). Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity From Its Foundation In 1852 To Its Fiftieth Anniversary. Philadelphia: Franklin Printing Company. OCLC 2140880.
- Campbell, J. Duncan (1952). The Centennial History of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, 1852–1952. Vol. Volume I, 1852–1902. Cleveland: Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. OCLC 3519106.
{{cite book}}
:|volume=
has extra text (help) - Gorgas, Harry S. (1952). The Centennial History of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, 1852–1952. Vol. Volume II, 1902–1952. Cleveland: Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. OCLC 3519106.
{{cite book}}
:|volume=
has extra text (help) - Phi Kappa Psi (1997). Grand Catalogue of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity (14th ed.). White Plains, NY: Bernard C. Harris Publishing Company. OCLC 324731269.
- Phi Kappa Psi (2009). Grand Catalogue of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity (16th ed.). White Plains, NY: Bernard C. Harris Publishing Company.
- Jones, Ted C.; Collinsworth, Shawn; Trigilio, James R.; Collins, David J., eds. (2002), "More Information--1. Chapter data, 2. Inactive chapter histories", The Manual of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity (Sesquicentenial ed.), Indianapolis: Phi Kappa Psi, pp. 144–166
Periodicals
edit- Collinsworth, Shawn (2010), Collinsworth, Shawn (ed.), The Shield of Phi Kappa Psi, 131 (1), Indianapolis: Phi Kappa Psi: 5–11, ISSN 0199-1280 http://viewer.zmags.com/htmlCat/index.php?mid=rprthh&pageid=5
{{citation}}
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ignored (help); Missing or empty|title=
(help)
- Collinsworth, Shawn, ed. (2008), "Chapter Directory", The Shield of Phi Kappa Psi, vol. 129, no. 3 (published Fall 2008), pp. 50–51
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(help)
Websites
edit- Miller, Katherine (May 1, 2009), "Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity house holds a wealth of history", The Maneater Student Newspaper, University of Missouri - Columbia, retrieved 2009-05-25
- Mitchell, Martha (1993), "Fraternities", Encyclopedia Brunoniana, Providence RI: Brown University, retrieved 2008-12-08
External Links
editPhi Kappa Psi.
<nowiki {{DEFAULTSORT:Phi Kappa Psi}} Category:Phi Kappa Psi Category:North American Interfraternity Conference Category:Lists of chapters of United States student societies by society</nowiki>